A wave of lawmakers who oppose vaccine requirements are winning elections for state legislatures amid a national drop in childhood vaccination rates and a resurfacing of preventable deadly diseases.

The victories come as part of a political backlash to pandemic restrictions and the proliferation of misinformation about the safety of vaccines introduced to fight the coronavirus.

In Louisiana, 29 candidates endorsed by Stand for Health Freedom, a national group that works to defeat mandatory vaccinations, won in the state’s off-year elections this fall.

Fred Mills, the retiring Republican chairman of the Louisiana Senate’s health and welfare committee, said he fears that once-fringe anti-vaccine policies that endanger people’s lives will have a greater chance of passing come January when newly-elected lawmakers are sworn in and more than a dozen Republican moderates like himself leave office.

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  • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    If there is a profit motive in it for them, bad companies can do good things. In this case, coming up with a COVID vaccine that worked and worked well was a big profit motive. And something anti-vaxxers don’t seem to realize: Moderna et al make a lot more money from a working COVID vaccine than a non-working COVID vaccine. People will eventually figure out the latter doesn’t work and stop using it.

    • Nollij@sopuli.xyz
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      11 months ago

      Or even one that works, but not as well.

      The J&J COVID vaccine was quietly discontinued a long time ago.